pacman::p_load(readxl, gifski, gapminder,
plotly, gganimate, tidyverse)Hands-on Ex3.2
Getting Started
This hands-on exercise is on Programming Animated Statistical Graphics with R
- Learn and create animated statistical graphics
- Link it back to work and potential project?
Tips from Prof Kam: Before you start making animated graphs, you should first ask yourself: Does it makes sense to go through the effort? If you are conducting an exploratory data analysis, a animated graphic may not be worth the time investment. However, if you are giving a presentation, a few well-placed animated graphics can help an audience connect with your topic remarkably better than static counterparts.
Loading the R packages
I will load the following R packages:
plotly, R library for plotting interactive statistical graphs.
gganimate, an ggplot extension for creating animated statistical graphs.
gifski converts video frames to GIF animations using pngquant's fancy features for efficient cross-frame palettes and temporal dithering. It produces animated GIFs that use thousands of colors per frame.
gapminder: An excerpt of the data available at Gapminder.org. We just want to use its country_colors scheme.
tidyverse, a family of modern R packages specially designed to support data science, analysis and communication task including creating static statistical graphs.
Importing the data
Finally new dataset!! 😄
col <- c("Country", "Continent")
globalPop <- read_xls("data/GlobalPopulation.xls",
sheet="Data") %>%
mutate_at(col, as.factor) %>%
mutate(Year = as.integer(Year))Animated Data Visualisation: gganimate methods
I have read the important points located here
Building a static population bubble plot
The basic ggplot2 functions are used to create a static bubble plot as shown below.
ggplot(globalPop, aes(x = Old, y = Young,
size = Population,
colour = Country)) +
geom_point(alpha = 0.7,
show.legend = FALSE) +
scale_colour_manual(values = country_colors) +
scale_size(range = c(2, 12)) +
labs(title = 'Year: {frame_time}',
x = '% Aged',
y = '% Young') 
Interesting plot. But I am trying to understand what it means 🙃
Building the animated bubble plot
In the code chunk below,
transition_time()of gganimate is used to create transition through distinct states in time (i.e. Year).ease_aes()is used to control easing of aesthetics. The default islinear. Other methods are: quadratic, cubic, quartic, quintic, sine, circular, exponential, elastic, back, and bounce.
ggplot(globalPop, aes(x = Old, y = Young,
size = Population,
colour = Country)) +
geom_point(alpha = 0.7,
show.legend = FALSE) +
scale_colour_manual(values = country_colors) +
scale_size(range = c(2, 12)) +
labs(title = 'Year: {frame_time}',
x = '% Aged',
y = '% Young') +
transition_time(Year) +
ease_aes('linear') 
This is 😱
Animated Data Visualisation: plotly
Building an animated bubble plot: ggplotly() method
gg <- ggplot(globalPop,
aes(x = Old,
y = Young,
size = Population,
colour = Country)) +
geom_point(aes(size = Population,
frame = Year),
alpha = 0.7,
show.legend = FALSE) +
scale_colour_manual(values = country_colors) +
scale_size(range = c(2, 12)) +
labs(x = '% Aged',
y = '% Young')
ggplotly(gg)Note that although show.legend = FALSE argument was used, the legend still appears on the plot. To overcome this problem, theme(legend.position='none') should be used as shown in the plot and code chunk below.
gg <- ggplot(globalPop,
aes(x = Old,
y = Young,
size = Population,
colour = Country)) +
geom_point(aes(size = Population,
frame = Year),
alpha = 0.7) +
scale_colour_manual(values = country_colors) +
scale_size(range = c(2, 12)) +
labs(x = '% Aged',
y = '% Young') +
theme(legend.position='none')
ggplotly(gg)Building an animated bubble plot: plot_ly() method
bp <- globalPop %>%
plot_ly(x = ~Old,
y = ~Young,
size = ~Population,
color = ~Continent,
sizes = c(2, 100),
frame = ~Year,
text = ~Country,
hoverinfo = "text",
type = 'scatter',
mode = 'markers'
) %>%
layout(showlegend = FALSE)
bp